Kaldor City Storm Mine uses characters and concepts that appear in Chris Boucher’s Doctor Who novel Corpse Marker to tell a mindbending tale of discovery and transformation.
Eighteen months after her final confrontation with Iago, Blayes awakes to find Kaldor City in quarantine and herself on a Storm Mine in the Blind Heart Desert. Her companions are three strangely familiar figures, a vengeful spirit – and a robot with a dangerous secret.
Trapped in a claustrophobic, dreamlike environment, the former terrorist must now undertake a journey which may end in the destruction of her world– or its beginning.

In Psychodrome, the Doctor and his companions land in a strange and unsettling environment populated by a wide variety of the strangest people imaginable – a crashed spacecraft here, a monastery there, even a regal court. And not everyone they meet has their best interests at heart… Iterations of I sees the TARDIS land on Fleming’s Island, the location of a mysterious old house containing stories of madness and death. The crew’s only chance is to understand what terrible thing has been disturbed here… before it consumes them utterly.

November 23rd 1963 proves to be a significant day in the lives of all eight Doctors. It’s a day that sets in motion a catastrophic chain of events which forces them to fight for their very existence. As a mysterious, insidious chaos unfolds within the TARDIS, the barriers of time break apart… From suburban England through war-torn alien landscapes and into a deadly, artificial dimension, all these Doctors and their companions must struggle against the power of an unfathomable, alien technology. From the very beginning, it is clear that the Master is somehow involved. By the end, for the Doctors, there may only be darkness.

A dying universe needs a ruler to save it, and that ruler is the Doctor. Trouble is, he’s not very good at ruling it and he may have lost his only friend, Bernice Summerfield… Doctor Who has a fairly long history in drawing from US politics, from The Deadly Assassin riffing on the Kennedy Assassination and Aliens of London/World War Three satirising the War on Terror. With the Doctor cast as an unpopular leader running a society in decline, have writers James Goss and Guy Adams taken inspiration from the Trump administration?

The Transcendence of Ephros sees the travellers encounter a devious corporation picking over the remains of a dying planet, while The Hidden Realm brings the intrepid pair down to Earth, to a town of mysterious disappearances, sinister magpies and secret alien plots… Volume 2 switches up the format laid down by its predecessor, dropping Mike Yates from the line-up to focus on the relationship between the Doctor and Jo, and ditching the occasional narration of the previous volume in favour of full cast, full blooded drama. With social themes, galactic yo-yoing, Venusian Aikido and the inclusion of Jo’s cousin Stephanie, this set promises to be a mix of the traditional and the new.

Two Third Doctor Audio Adventures in a 5CD boxset, with Katy Manning as Jo and Tim Treloar’s special rendition of the Doctor, featuring Robin Weaver (Black Mirror), Iain Batchelor (Wolf Hall) and Nicholas Briggs as the Daleks.

Storm of the Horofax sees the Doctor and UNIT called in to investigate an alien ship found in the North Sea, while The Conquest of Far pits the Doctor against his oldest enemies on a human colony now under Dalek control. Pairing an earthbound UNIT adventure with a futuristic sci-fi tale means this 5CD set captures the essence of the Third Doctor era whilst also giving it a new lease of life. Treloar’s performance has always been a respectful tribute to the Third Doctor, and with two sets already under his belt his rendition is now honed to a remarkable level of precision.

The War Doctor becomes entangled with the dealings of a battlefield reporter, seeks a dangerous alliance with a guerrilla organisation and prepares for battle as the Daleks make their final assault on Gallifrey… While the War Doctor series has so far been largely devoid of ties to previous eras, this release marks a change with the return of Leela, the warrior companion who took Gallifrey as her adopted home. This inspired combination of characters, along with the performances of Hurt and Jameson, makes for electrifying listening. Sadly, this trilogy of audio adventures will be the last for Hurt’s Doctor – but where does the War Doctor’s journey end?

The past and present collide when new-school UNIT team up with their 20th century counterparts, as Jemma Redgrave (Kate Stewart) and Ingrid Oliver (Petronella Osgood) are joined by Katy Manning (Jo Jones), John Levene (John Benton) and Richard Franklin (Mike Yates).

Beneath the surface, an ancient force is rising. The Silurians and Sea Devils are poised to take back their world. Revolution is coming… Featuring old friends and foes alike, this 5CD box set has all the oomph and excitement of a summer blockbuster!

The new-school UNIT team are back in full force for this 5CD box set, with Kate Stewart (Jemma Redgrave), Osgood (Ingrid Oliver) and Lieutenant Sam Bishop (Luther’s Warren Brown) leading the charge. Nick Briggs meanwhile adds another monster voice to his repertoire, portraying the Silence.

There is no proof of any hostile incursions of a species with the ability to wipe themselves from the minds of others. There is no evidence such a species may be behind the sudden rise of divisive politician Kenneth LeBlanc. There is nothing that poses a clear and present danger to planet Earth. Or so it seems… Big Finish flex their new series muscles in this UNIT vs Silence showdown over four feature-length dramas. With a storyline featuring a controversial political movement, this release feels entirely right for the age of Brexit. Prominent Big Finish authors Matt Fitton and John Dorney provide stellar material.

Roanoke Island, 1590. The Doctor’s companions, Professor Litefoot and Henry Gordon Jago, find themselves prisoners of the natives in the New World.
But there’s something something strange here – stranger than even the colonists, led by Englishman John White.
What are the ghostly children? And who is the Old Man of Croaton?
The travellers are about to discover the secret of the lost colony… and it may cost Jago’s life.

Professor Litefoot and Henry Gordon Jago are accustomed to the murky fog of Victorian London and the palatable pints of half and half at the Red Tavern. They are not used to travelling through time and space with their old friend the Doctor.
Now they find themselves whisked off to the planet Venus in the distant future, at a time when warrior women rule from a floating city in the clouds. There’s a mystery here, one that the Grand Empress Vulpina intends to keep secret. Even if it means destroying these visitors from the long-dead planet Earth…

Adric and Tegan have been abducted. The Doctor and Nyssa follow their trail to the planet Zaltys – a planet of buried treasure, buried secrets and a native population that has vanished overnight… Zaltys has an unusual genesis – based on the anecdote that Kinda was inspired by watching music videos of the time, author Matthew J Elliot (Maker of Demons) has taken inspiration from similar source material. Couple that with a title originating from a Lithuanian fertility symbol and you have the makings of one of the more distinctive audio adventures of late.

In the dying days of silent film, Hollywood can be a scary place. But there’s more to it than being an out-of-work actor – there’s something sinister going on behind the scenes. It’s Lights, Camera, Action for the Doctor, but the chance of a Hollywood ending is slim… Big Finish stories that make novel use of the audio medium have been widely praised in the past, so the latest effort from superlative scribe James Goss is sure to be stellar. The score, melding ’80s synth with classical pieces typical of ’20s cinema, also provides an aural treat.

26 years ago, a team of scientists came to a moon to unearth the secrets of a long-dead civilisation. They were later found to have died in what the authorities called an anti-matter explosion. Alone and desperate, Bernice Summerfield will do anything to get back home. But where is home?
The capital world of Zordin seems to offer the only chance of answers, but that’s a long way away. The offer of a job could be her best way of paying for the voyage but… archaeology is illegal… and there’s a quarantine… and she’ll have to leap from a spacecraft in orbit. But what does that matter?
On a world guarded by armed satellites and patrolled by defence drones on the surface, Benny’s going to have to use all her knowledge, skill and wits. Because it’s not the moon itself that’s the problem. It’s what happened there; what remains there; what might escape.

Often praised as the most consistently engaging audio range, the Companion Chronicles were laid to rest in June 2014 – only to make a surprise return with this special 4CD boxset. This collection promises a continuation of the range’s unusual, intimate storytelling; with Susan venturing from the TARDIS on her own, Vicki working an office job, an older Steven living the life of a mountain-dwelling hermit and a peculiar encounter with Benjamin Franklin!

This 5CD box set, the first in a series of four, sees Paul McGann’s leather-clad Eighth Doctor gain a new companion in the form of Helen Sinclair (Hattie Morahan). Liv Chenka (Nicola Walker) is also on hand as the Doctor battles the multiple-personality villain, the Eleven (Mark Bonnar).

Called to Gallifrey, the Doctor leads a manhunt for the most dangerous criminal known to Time Lord society – a hunt that takes him from the Capitol’s corridors of power, to London in the 1960s, to Renaissance Italy, to a Victorian factory adrift in the depths of space. With its sprawling narrative, the Doom Coalition series looks set to prove that there’s still plenty of life left in the adventures of the Eighth Doctor.

Materialising amongst a vast space fleet, the TARDIS travellers find themselves on opposite sides of a desperate, devious war… Big Finish have already made two spot-on calls in recasting leads from the classic series. Will Jemma Powell, who played Jacqueline Hill in the 50th anniversary docudrama An Adventure in Space and Time, make it three for three?

In this blockbuster trilogy of adventures chronicling further skirmishes of the Time War, the Sontarans make a desperate move to enter the conflict, the Daleks plot to turn the tide of battle against Gallifrey and the horrors of war threaten to spill over to planet Earth… This boxset places the War Doctor on Earth for the first time, making the inspired decision to send him to Cold War Berlin – an appropriately bleak chapter of history to match the machinations of the Time War. With the addition of Sontarans to the ongoing mix, and writers David Llewellyn, Andrew Smith and Ken Bentley on board, this may be the most diverse War Doctor collection yet.